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- East of Los Angeles
These parking placards offer a few advantages to people with mobility issues, but they aren't the "all access" pass that some people think they are....Here in the UK, the far bigger problem is family members who abuse one that is genuinely needed by a relative. That, and the idiots (whether they need it or not) who think that it is a licence to park anywhere they please, whether safe or no...
I don't know how it works anywhere else, but here in California if someone abuses the use of a Disabled Parking placard it will be revoked and the person to whom it was issued will never receive another one; not legitimately, anyway. To me it seems foolish to risk that just because Cousin Shiftless doesn't feel like walking an extra 100 feet.
I don't particularly care if someone does this in an unoccupied or sparsely occupied section of a parking lot. I don't really see the need to do it if so many parking spaces are available, but I don't really care one way or another.I sometimes take up 2 spots in a parking lot. But when I do, it is at the back of a LARGE parking lot.
And sometimes it's necessary. The people who design the parking lot layouts here in southern California love to squeeze the parking space lines together as close as they're allowed by local regulations just so they can fit a few extra cars on the lot. That's fine if you're driving a golf cart, but I've lost count of the number of times I've found an empty parking space that was so narrow that I could park my 3/4 ton pickup truck between the lines, but would have to exit and enter through the sunroof because there wouldn't be enough room to open the doors with cars parked on either side.